🛠️ Build, Repair, Conquer!
The TotalBoat 5:1 Epoxy Kit is a premium solution for marine projects, offering a versatile epoxy resin and hardener combination. With options for fast or slow curing, this kit is designed for a variety of materials including wood, fiberglass, and metals. Each kit includes calibrated pumps for precise mixing, ensuring a strong, waterproof finish that can be sanded and shaped to perfection.
Brand | TotalBoat |
Specific Uses For Product | Repair, Fiberglass projects |
Material | Epoxy Resin |
Compatible Material | Wood, Alloy Steel, Aluminium, Plastic |
Item Form | Liquid |
Special Feature | Strong |
Colour | Clear (cures to amber) |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Package Information | Can, Syringe |
Item Volume | 177 Millilitres |
Water Resistance Level | Waterproof |
Net Quantity | 1.0 count |
UPC | 811932021014 |
Global Trade Identification Number | 00811932021014 |
Manufacturer | TotalBoat |
Country of Origin | USA |
Number of Memory Sticks | 1 |
Item Weight | 2 kg 720 g |
Package Dimensions | 31.25 x 23.6 x 15.97 cm; 2.72 kg |
Item part number | 365248 |
Included Components | Resin, Hardener |
Are batteries included? | No |
J**Y
Great product.
Great product. Works as intended.
R**N
Superb wood filler
Rather than replacing more than a dozen rotted deck boards. I decided to try to fill the "ravines." I tried many wood putties: n'yet . Bondo? n'yet (Became unworkable too fast for my application). This kit with its slow hardening was perfect. Beyond being simple to use, with the two attached pumps pre-measuring the correct amounts of the resin and hardener. I decided to WILDLY experiment with "additives." First, I added a couple of scoops of Durham's Water Bingo! Mixed easily and perfectly increased the amount of the glop and was easy to spread into the ravines. Dried hard as a rock but it must be abraded hard for painting. Next, I stuffed steel wool into craters, which are deeper than ravines. Then I infused the steel wool with the mixed epoxy. Why? Epoxy bonds with steel and throws off heat to boot. The gaps I filled with steel wool and epoxy are clearly stronger than the original wood fibers because solid steel....Btw: you can perform microsurgery on the "treated" steel wool if you have a competent grinder with attachments. Finally, I mixed grout with sand into the epoxy. Why? Because the sand in this concoction, when used to fill shallower gaps, provided a surface onto which coating would better adhere. Success.Moral of the story: I would have been far, far better off, prying up the deck boards, purchasing new ones, and installing them. Why didn't I do it? I am a retired desk jockey and when I started the project more than a year ago, I did not have the carpentry skills to cut and replace the boards. I have them now. Absolutely no regrets even though the filled-in boards are less than cosmetically perfect.Two warnings: you should absolutely not experiments with epoxy additives. Use only those that the manufacturer prescribes. My outcomes were fine but yours may be disastrous. Second, I could care less about bubbles in the epoxy. Accordingly, my recommendations are expressly limited to the use to which I put the product.
J**S
Easy to work with. Dried to a sold clear finish.
Our travel trailer had bad delamination spots on the side walls from our roof leaking. I watched a bunch of videos of others using total boat to fix the areas. We ended up using clamps and a spray gun to spray the total boat into the bad spots and let them sit overnight. If I did it again I would just use a syringe and inject the total boat into the area as the spray goes everywhere and you cant build it up in the real bad areas.Some spots we used a brush to get a good coat on. It worked very well and when looking at the areas they look just as good as when we bought the trailer. Next I want to try and use it and do a flood coat on a table of some sort.
M**S
Great for fiberglass project
I used this for a few projects on my vessels it works well. Be mindful of temperature and the mix of catalyst as it will set faster then you think
R**E
works great
this is a good epoxy to work with
Trustpilot
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